PhysiciansPractice Members: Login | Register
  • Home
  • Blog
  • Career
  • Coding
  • EHR
  • Finance
  • Malpractice
  • Patient Relations
  • Staff
  • Technology
  • Buyers Guide
  • Publication

Home » MGMA 2010

 

Investigations, Prosecutions of Doctors Could Increase Under Health Reform

By Bob Keaveney | October 26, 2010

Attorney Robert Saner has found one of the few things Republicans and Democrats in Washington agree on: Medicare costs are skyrocketing, in part because of fraud and waste perpetrated by healthcare providers, and CMS needed vast new powers to investigate and penalize violators.

That’s why for all the debate generated by the health reform law that passed in March, none of it surrounded the expanded authority granted to CMS. So politically uncontroversial are the CMS’s new powers, in fact, that one (relatively minor) power that was left out of the health reform law was introduced separately in the House of Representatives on Sept. 15 and passed only a week later. “The average bill that’s introduced in the House is never passed at all,” Saner, the MGMA’s Washington counsel for more than 30 years, told attendees of the association’s annual convention Tuesday.

But getting rid of fraud in Medicare is “completely bipartisan,” he said. “If Tea Partiers sweep the midterm elections, take over Congress, and make good on their threats to repeal health reform, the one component they’d keep would be the fraud and abuse provisions.”

How will the new provisions affect your practice? You should schedule a meeting with your attorney to brief you on the specifics; the application of many provisions is still being worked out via CMS’s rule-making process. Meanwhile, here are a few of the highlights:

Enrollment and re-enrollment of providers. CMS is working on heightened scrutiny of new providers and practices enrolling in Medicare. It has proposed creating three levels of review, depending on the nature of the practice, with those in sectors that have been most prone to fraud (home health providers, for example) receiving the highest level of scrutiny. Physicians in traditional practices would most likely find themselves in the lowest level of scrutiny. Still, new enrollees of any type could find themselves subject to various new screening measures for as long as a year after signing up.

Billing. CMS is expected to crack down on practices’ failure to promptly return overpayments. Although practices have always been required to return monies they were not owed, new language clarifies that you have 60 days from the moment you become aware of the overpayment to return it. It also introduces heavy new fines and possible penalties for a failure to do so, regardless of whose fault the overpayment was. “I would take a look at what your credit-balance report is showing and how you’re working those,” Saner advised. Other billing-related rules abound, too, such as one that will require practices to include their physician’s National Provider Identifier number on every claim.

Access to records. You’ve always been required to supply CMS with access to your records when it asks. But now, your failure to do so in a “timely” manner could trigger a penalty of $15,000 a day. Saner cautions practices to review their protocols for responding to record requests now, and make sure you follow them.

Self-referral and anti-kickback laws. There are some new rules governing referral to imaging services that fall under the Stark self-referral law. And some new language for the federal anti-kickback law, which has long prevented doctors from being paid for referrals, will make prosecutions easier and penalties harsher.

Suspensions of payment. If CMS receives a “credible allegation” of fraud against you — and it is adding new whistleblower programs and expanding others — it can suspend all payments to you while it investigates. That could devastate certain practices, yet CMS has "that authority, and my guess is they’ll look for a few test cases to use it,” Saner said. “All it takes is a few to send a message.”

 

For all the latest from this year's MGMA conference, be sure to visit our MGMA Conference Insider page.

 

 

Join the Conversation

Want to join the conversation? Just sign in or register today to become part of our growing, online community.






Topic Index

Best States to Practice
Career
Coding
EHR
Finance
Jobs
Law & Malpractice
Mobile Health
  Meaningful Use
Patient Relations
Patient Dismissal
RVU/Relative Value Units
Staff Management
Staff Salaries
Technology
All Topics


FromOurSponsors

Ingenix CareTracker™ is a single database, 2011 CCHIT®-certified, EHR/PM solution that is guaranteed to help physicians meet meaningful use requirements.

 

Ingenix CareTracker EHR - faster, easier, and more affordable.
Cloud based EHRs: Why they might be the right fit for your small practice.

 

Emdeon is a leading provider of revenue and payment cycle solutions that connect payers, providers and patients.

 

Discover how Emdeon’s solutions can accelerate your reimbursement, improve your productivity and simplify workflows in your office.
Learn how Emdeon can help you qualify for Meaningful Use incentives.

 

Pink by Sage – inspired by those who fight breast cancer every day. Share your stories and we’ll donate $5 in your honor.

 

Learn about Pink by Sage
Find out more about Sage

  • On This Site
  • Most Emailed
  • On This Topic

MostPopular

  • Secrets of Success

    NOV 15 2002 PHYSICIANS PRACTICE READ >>

  • The Best States to Practice: America’s Physician-Friendliest States

    FEB 1 2007 PHYSICIANS PRACTICE READ >>

  • The Future of Healthcare

    APR 1 2010 PHYSICIANS PRACTICE READ >>

  • Medicare's New Annual Wellness Visit

    JAN 12 2011 PHYSICIANS PRACTICE READ >>

  • Strategy: Could You Use a Scribe?

    APR 1 2007 PHYSICIANS PRACTICE READ >>

MostPopular

  • Planning for ICD-10 Conversion

    JAN 31 2012PHYSICIANS PRACTICE READ >>

  • Can That Applicant Do the Job at Your Medical Practice?

    JAN 25 2012PHYSICIANS PRACTICE READ >>

  • Monitoring Revenue Cycle Management at Your Medical Practice

    FEB 1 2012PHYSICIANS PRACTICE READ >>

  • Balancing Patient Interaction, EHR Use at Your Medical Practice

    FEB 1 2012 READ >>

  • Top 4 ACO Considerations for Physicians

    JAN 28 2012PHYSICIANS PRACTICE READ >>

MostPopular

  • The Future of Healthcare

    APR 1 2010 PHYSICIANS PRACTICE READ >>

  • The Making of America's Strongest Practices

    NOV 15 2004 PHYSICIANS PRACTICE READ >>

  • Healthcare Reform: Voting for Change

    JUL 15 2008 PHYSICIANS PRACTICE READ >>

  • The EHR Stimulus: A Complete Primer

    JUL 15 2009 PHYSICIANS PRACTICE READ >>

  • Technology: The Road to EMR Interoperability

    OCT 1 2008 PHYSICIANS PRACTICE READ >>

  • Popular
  • Recent

Comments

  • Treat Your Patients Like Customers, or Lose Them

    JAN 17 2012 READ >>

  • The Pros and Cons of Private Practice

    JAN 27 2012 READ >>

  • Having Students at My Medical Practice Provides Lessons in Liability

    JAN 30 2012 READ >>

  • Dear Mr. Hospital CEO: Here's How to Boost Patient Satisfaction

    FEB 11 2012 READ >>

  • Balancing Patient Interaction, EHR Use at Your Medical Practice

    FEB 1 2012 READ >>

Comments

  • Medicare's New Annual Wellness Visit

    JAN 12 2011 PHYSICIANS PRACTICE READ >>

  • Dear Mr. Hospital CEO: Here's How to Boost Patient Satisfaction

    FEB 11 2012 READ >>

  • In EHR Era, Medical Practices Still Drowning in Paper Records

    DEC 11 2011 READ >>

  • Physicians Might Be Pleasantly Surprised with Career Change

    NOV 22 2011 READ >>

  • Three Difficult Questions about Your Medical Practice Future

    FEB 16 2012 READ >>

JobListings

Post a job

Powered by SearchMedica Jobs


SearchMedicaSearchResult

Find peer-reviewed literature and websites for practicing medical professionals

CME on Practice Management
Evidence on Practice Management
Guidelines on Practice Management
Patient Education on Practice Management
Clinical Trials on Practice Management
Practical Articles on Practice Management
Research and Reviews on Practice Management
All "Practice Management" results


CancerNetwork | CME LLC | ConsultantLive | Diagnostic Imaging | Musculoskeletal Network | OBGYN.net | PediatricsConsultantLive |
Physicians Practice | Psychiatric Times | SearchMedica | Medical Resources

© 1996 - 2012 UBM Medica LLC, a UBM company
Privacy Statement - Terms of Service - Advertising Information - Editorial Policy Statement - UBM Medica Network Privacy Policy